State Ex Rel. Thompson v. Day

273 N.W. 684, 200 Minn. 77, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 729
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 26, 1937
DocketNos. 31,379, 31,380, 31,381, 31,382.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 273 N.W. 684 (State Ex Rel. Thompson v. Day) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Thompson v. Day, 273 N.W. 684, 200 Minn. 77, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 729 (Mich. 1937).

Opinions

Holt, Justice.

This is an action to make permanent and absolute a writ of prohibition preventing the Honorable Vince A. Day, a judge of the fourth judicial district, from acting upon an executive order of the governor which assigned him to hear and determine an action pending before the regularly elected, qualified, and acting judge of the tenth judicial district.

Relators commenced an action in the district court of Freeborn county, tenth judicial district, of which district the Honorable Norman E. Peterson is the only judge, to restrain five striking employes and nine nonemployes, who, in a sit-down strike, were alleged to have seized premises and equipment owned by relators and used by them in a general trucking business. After hearing the testimony eon 'pcurte, the trial court made findings of fact and entered an *79 order requiring the defendants to show cause why temporary injunctions shoxild not issue as prayed for in the complaint. The order to show cause was accompanied by a temporary restraining order.

One Dave Petersen, a defendant in the injunction suit, sent to the governor of the state of Minnesota an affidavit alleging that Judge Peterson was prejudiced against him and in consequence was disqualified from acting in the suit and requested the governor to appoint another judge to try the action. The affidavit did not allege that Judge Peterson was disqualified in any other way than by prejudice. March 30, 1937, the governor promulgated an order appointing the Honorable Vince A. Day, judge of the fourth judicial district, to hear and determine the case at Albert Lea at a time therein designated, and removing Judge Peterson from acting on the ground that he was disqualified.

Belators applied to this court for a writ of prohibition, and March 31, 1937, an alternative writ directing Judge Day to refrain from proceeding further and to show cause why he should not be restrained from so proceeding was issued. The application for the writ was based upon an affidavit of relator Thompson stating that Judge Peterson is in good health, is fully up with his work, and has no accumulation of business undisposed of; is not pecuniarily interested in the litigation nor related to any of the parties to it. Dave Petersen’s affidavit did not controvert any of the above facts.

2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 9221, provides for the filing of an affidavit of prejudice in a district where there are two or more judges. The section did not apply in the tenth district when this proceeding arose because there is but one judge (but see L. 1937, c. 237).

In State ex rel. Decker v. Montague, 195 Minn. 278, 262 N. W. 684, this court went fully into the history of the statutes purporting to vest in the governor power to substitute a trial judge when convenience or the public interest requires it, and it was there held under the circumstances existing in the Montague case that it was not constitutionally permissible for the governor to designate a judge to try the Decker case.

*80 As noted in the Montague case, art. 6, § 5, of our state constitution provides:

“The legislature may provide by law that the judge of one district may discharge the duties of the judge of any other district not his own, when convenience or the public interest may require it.”

In 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 158, which was under consideration in the Montague case, the legislature added to the convenience or the interest of the public “the interest of any litigant.” From our discussion in the Montague case it is quite obvious that this court regarded that quoted constitutional provision as applying to a situation Avhere a district judge was disabled or where the accumulation of business was such that he was unable to take care of it. The history of the legislation from territorial days doAvn to 1891 indicates that the legislature shared our present views on that subject.

2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 9218, prohibits a district judge from sitting in any cause except to hear a motion to change the venue, if he be interested in its determination or if he might be excluded for bias from acting therein as a juror. It also provides that if he be the : only judge of the district he shall grant a change of venue Avhenever upon a motion his interest or bias shall be made to appear “unless before the motion is heard the governor shall have assigned another judge to try such cause.” Actual bias is defined in 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 10737, as a state of mind which prevents a juror from trying an issue impartially and without prejudice to the substantial rights of the challenging party; but since Sjoberg v. Nordin, 26 Minn. 501, 5 N. W. 677, this statute has been interpreted as not disqualifying a judge for other than a pecuniary interest in the event of the action. The language of the statute was someAvhat modified by the 1905 revision but the meaning Avas not changed. State v. Ledbeter, 111 Minn. 110, 126 N. W. 477. The Sjoberg case has stood too long and has been followed too many times for this court now to depart from its construction of the statute. It follows that the Dave Petersen affidavit stated no cause for disqualifying Judge Peterson.

Art. 3, § 1, of our state constitution provides:

*81 “The powers of the government shall be divided into three distinct departments, the legislative, executive, and judicial; and no person or persons belonging to or constituting one of these „departments shall exercise any of the ponoers properly belonging to.either of the others, except in instances expressly provided in this Constitution.” (Italics supplied.)

We do not regard the provisions of art. 6, § 5, as • sufficient authorization to the legislature to empower the executive to step out of his constitutional sphere and to exercise authority properly belonging to the judicial branch of the government. We think that full power under art. 6, § 5, could be exercised by the legislature without calling in the executive. If so the section should be. so construed, because to construe it otherwise would be in derogation of the provisions of art. 3, § 1, which are fundamental to the preservation of a free democracy. Other means have been provided for disposal of matters arising before judges' disqualified by interest or by alleged bias, L. 1937, c. 237.

As stated in the Montague case, the power sought by § 158.to.be vested in the governor is fundamentally a judicial power and hence; unless granted to him by some other provision of the constitution, it is in contravention of art. 3, § 1. Even if art. 6, § 5, were construed to authorize the legislature to act by so empowering the governor, it does not extend to the disqualification here sought to be invoked as a basis for the exercise of the power. Even if § 158 were construed to reach bias and prejudice insofar as it seeks to vest in the governor authority to substitute judges on account of bias or prejudice, it goes beyond the authority of art. 6, § 5, and the same may be said of the implication that the governor has such authority, contained in § 9218. U’Ren v. Bagley, 118 Or. 77, 245 P. 1074, 46 A. L. R. 1173, is not in point because the power of the legislature to invest the executive with judicial functions was not involved.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
273 N.W. 684, 200 Minn. 77, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-thompson-v-day-minn-1937.